The mechanisms that generate "seed" magnetic fields in our Universe and that
amplify them throughout cosmic time remain poorly understood. By means of
fully-kinetic particle-in-cell simulations of turbulent, initially unmagnetized
plasmas, we study the genesis of magnetic fields via the Weibel instability and
follow their dynamo growth up to near-equipartition levels. In the kinematic
stage of the dynamo, we find that the rms magnetic field strength grows
exponentially with rate Ξ³Bββ0.4urmsβ/L, where L/2Ο
is the driving scale and urmsβ is the rms turbulent velocity. In the
saturated stage, the magnetic field energy reaches about half of the turbulent
kinetic energy. Here, magnetic field growth is balanced by dissipation via
reconnection, as revealed by the appearance of plasmoid chains. At saturation,
the integral-scale wavenumber of the magnetic spectrum approaches kintββ12Ο/L. Our results show that turbulence -- induced by, e.g., the
gravitational build-up of galaxies and galaxy clusters -- can magnetize
collisionless plasmas with large-scale near-equipartition fields.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures, PRL in pres